What Can You Do Right Now?

Set sprinklers to water the lawn or garden only - not the street or sidewalk.

 

Use the microwave to cook small meals. (It uses less power than an oven.)

 

Purchase "Green Power" for your home's electricity. (Contact your power supplier to see where and if it is available.)

 

Scrape, rather than rinse, dishes before loading into the dishwasher; wash only full loads.

 

Cut back on air conditioning and heating use if you can.

 

Turn off appliances and lights when you leave the room.

 

More Tips »





 


Entries Tagged as 'Xeriscape & Water'

Companion Gardening: A Visual And Edible Bounty




April 16th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
After nine years, Mary Bakatsa’s garden is bearing fruit…and vegetables…and flowers…and herbs. It is a chorus of life, and supports more activity than even Mary imagined when she started gardening nearly 20 years ago with a few potted herbs.
Along with her flowers and veggies, which grow side by side, she has [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

Here’s How Her Garden Grows




April 16th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
Mary Bakatsa is “organic all the way” in her sprawling Austin garden. But that doesn’t mean she simply avoids pesticides and blithely sits back to watch. Organic gardening is more proactive and veteran gardener Bakatsa runs dozens of schemes to nudge nature in the right direction. She places certain plants near others [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Xeriscape & Water

Keep Off The Greedy Grass, Go Native




March 28th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
Ah, the smell of freshly mown grass. It’s the smell of childhood, of school vacations and picnics and lying in the backyard, finding faces in clouds. No one will deny that plush turf is a big part of modern Americana. But the imported, “exotic” grasses of our childhoods, nostalgic and fragrant as they [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Greener Businesses · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

Learn Your Native Grass Species




March 28th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
To sort out which grasses to use and where, we consulted native grass expert Bill Neiman, head of operations and farming for Native American Seed in Junction, Texas. For much of the United States, he recommends “Native Sun Turfgrass,” a blend of 34 percent Blue Grama and 66 percent Buffalo grass created [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

AP Investigation Gives New Meaning To “Treated Water”




March 10th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
In case you missed the story about how Americans are getting an inadvertent dosing of pharmaceuticals in their drinking water, check out the original AP investigation that ran Sunday. The probe found traces of antibiotics, heart medications, mood drugs, anti-convulsants and sex hormones in water supplies across the nation, from New York [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Briefs · Headlines · Xeriscape & Water

Xeriscaping: The Path to Water Independence




April 19th, 2007 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
There’s been a lot of talk lately about energy independence. Important, no doubt. But we need to think about preserving water too, and nothing works harder toward this goal - or offers as much creative satisfaction - as Xeriscaping.

Planting drought-resistant and native plants that survive on natural rainfall is a familiar concept in [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Energy & Water · Organics · Xeriscape & Water

advertising


     
 

The Carbon Competition: U.S. And China Both Take Black

August 8th, 2008

In the race for top carbon emissions polluter, the United States is still Number One, but China is sprinting forward and could soon edge into the lead. The current Olympics host nation accounted for a “staggering 57 percent of the growth of emissions” worldwide this century, and will likely surpass the U.S. as the single biggest belcher of fossil fuel emissions sometime this year, according to the Worldwatch Institute.

The standings right now: The U.S. currently contributes 19.5 percent of global fossil fuel emissions compared with China’s 18.3 percent. [Read more →]

 

BP Announces Plans To Run With Cleaner Biofuels

August 7th, 2008

British Petroleum (BP) has announced plans to bring cellulosic ethanol to market in the U.S., through a partnership with bio-fuel developer Verenium, a company that makes biofuels from rice straw, sugarcane stalks, switchgrass and wood chips. The partnership could help speed the availability of lower cost, more environmentally friendly biofuels, according to an announcement by both companies this week. [Read more →]

 

Study Shows Auto Buyers Are Gas Wise

August 7th, 2008

By Tom Kessler

Almost 90 percent of the car shoppers who visit Kelley Blue Book’s Web site say they are concerned about the future of our environment, company research shows. Among survey respondents, 80 percent agreed that individuals should make lifestyle changes to help reduce CO2 emissions. And 75 percent of KBB shoppers reported that they have made changes to further the betterment of the environment. The most frequent lifestyle changes cited were:

  • recycling (54 percent)
  • cutting back on driving (46 percent)
  • purchasing a fuel-efficient car (31 percent)

[Read more →]

A WFAA.com Site